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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (March 28, 1920)
THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MARCH 28, 1920. Theda Duplicates Screen Success in "the Blue Flame" By BURNS MANTLE NEW YORK. (special corre spondence.) "To be good it only to be forgotten," declares ' Theda Bara in "The Blue Flame"; "I'm going to be bad enough to be remembered for ages." And there is reason to believe that Theda will , - get her wish. "The Blue Flame" is about as bad as they write them these days, or ever have written them. - And yet, financially, it is so far enormously successful. In Washing ton, Pittsburgh and Boston, Vhere, I understand, the audiences ac cepted the play much more serious ; ly than they did in New Ydrk, the Incaters were literally stormed by those curious to see the famous screen vampire upon the stage. Here ' the opening night seats retailed for as nign as $o eacn ana ine nouse was packed. Theda is not a particularly vam Irish vamp in "The Blue Flame." In the fiist act she coos as sweetly as any ingenue, and with much the same elocutionary effect. She is married to an atheistical scientist, who does not believe tn God and knows nothing of sirens. He has perfected ia his electrical labratory a machine that will recreate life. Give him a corpse, still warm, he ; boasts, and he will compete witli God any day in shaping the destiny 01 a numaii being. Outside a storm is racinsr. Across the way a church organist is play ing hymns. Occasionally the life machine emits sparks, as though straining at the dynamo to give a taste of its power.; Theda, after pleading with the agnostic to Rive up his evil theories and to embrace tre great faith, accidentally touches , the machine and thus attracts the . lightning to her. She falls in a heap on the floor. Instantly the scientist realizes that the chance he has hoped for is his. Picking Theda up he lays - her in the .electrical 1 chair and turns on the current. ,. There is a hissing and a sputtering. slowly theda begins to revive, but not before a blue flame, the size of a lady's glpve and the shape of a cock s comb, drifts up the side wall. "Seel Seel It is her soul!" shouts an observer. "Nonsense" answers the scientist, and increases the cur rent. Theda moves, breathes, lives, straightens her gown, smooths her hair and stands up. Her voice has coarsened. Her manner has changed. Her eyes . flash a consuming passion for con quest "You think I'm cold, do you?" she shouts, referring to her hus- : band's earlier suggestion that her religion was taking all the vamp out of her; "you think I'm cold. Well, all I want is a legat excuse, and I'll show you how cold I am. Kiss me, dearie." And the curtain is lowered. 'After that the heroine without a soul loses her respect for the law. Young Donald Gallaher, as nice a boy as ever was in the first act, " walks into her boudoir in the sec ond act and is -greeted with the sig nificant "words: "Did you bring the cocaine?" He did, and together lhey. exchange snuffs. Then Theda insists that she muit have $85,000, and at once. To cut the story short, she ruins Donald, makes a wastrel and a theif, and finally connives at 'the murder of another pal, her hus band's best friend, and finally assists in the strangling of her sister-in-law. And when husband finds her in Chinatown in the third act and knows what she has done, she cheer fully puts all the blame on him. ""You made me what I am today; I hope you're satisfied" she sneers, in effect . " . :But, as you may have suspected, it is all a dream. In thT last act Theda is he sweet, - ingenuish. self again, and when the wakened scient ist acknowledges himself beaten she " prettily assures him that "God works ' mysteriously His wonders Xo per form 1" Even in an Al Woods melo drama. ? tr- wmSk hem (1 7ty : ; Raymond ft tcfictcA f mm S I ... . 1 VicteraWtMe J 1 Rite dam Jinn Recider (C0Wm. ZOJ$RANDtS) the fleshly ensembles that make for it international reputation, but a little shy as to novelties or flashes of humor. Seeing it and the Spind ly, the young visitors may safely boast that they have seen every thing. - The first of the early summer re vues is failed "What's in, a Name?" Not much was exoected of it. but to the Broadway crowd's delight it proved a pleasant surprise. John Murray Anderson, a young man whose pervious training as a pro ducer has been confined to the res taurant cabarets and the "Green wich Village Follies," bravely stepped forth with this one and chal lenged no less an authority on beau ty shows than F. Ziegfeld himself. And, what is greatly in his favor. he has had the courage to make the venture with a cast of principals practically unknown to Broadway. Ihe note of newness he carries into the scenic decoration also. The stage is elaborately hung with silk and gauze, and the changes in the setting are effected by changing the lighting. He works with--an inner j offee fenper (Alexander Carr stage and an outer' stage and avoids all the awkwardness of "drops" and shallow front sets. But more im portant still is his adherence to a definite artistic scheme. He not only achieves pictorial beauty, but he de pends more on the intelligence of his audience than hfs competitors have done. Very little of the' vul garity of the cabaret revue is per mitted to obtrude, and most of -the ladies of the ensemble are decently, as well as beautifully, clothed from toes to torso. Broadway is today predicting that, if he is-able to con trol his egv a few years will see young Anderson leading the local producers of revues by several lengths. I il It - 1 " I am not familiar with the Bara of cinema triumphs. But from the few I have seen I am ready to credit the statement of - her friends that "she is more attractive on the stage than on the screen. Her voice is pleasant, her face pretty, her figure slight- She has . had considerable stage experience, and though her re cent coaching is evident, making her a little artificial and self-conscious, she is an actress of average competence. -' Her first New York audience lauphed freely at the play, but was kind to the star, and as she is said to own half the show she will proba bly make another fortune playing it. Mr. Woods has surrounded her with an expensive cast and a lot of scen ery. Alan Dinehart is the .husband, and the others include young Galla her, Henry Herbt, Dewitt Jennings, and Thais Law ton. ; - The mystery of the Spinelly cos tumes furnished one of the minor agitations of the week. The Spinelly is a young French woman imported at considerable expense and with some trouble for the new "Midnight Frolic" on the New Amsterdam toof. The costumes were supposed 'o have left Paris with her, but she .raveled by airplane in order to catch her steamer and the costumes 'were shipped by express. Conse quently they were delayed, and her appearance on the roof was post poned a week. But and here the mystery enters when Mile. Spinelly did finally ap pear there were still no costumes. A girdle, a pair of shoulder straps and a harely distinguishable air of ap prehension was about al! she wore. The roof crowd was worried. Could it be that : the captain of the ship boxed the costumes with the com pass, and then forgot them? 4 But the Spinelly was not worried. She romped over the dancing floor with the natural abandon of little sister being chased by nursie from the bath. She danced, a little stiffly, but with enthusiasm, with Carl Ran dall, the best of the native leapers. And she sang prettily. Not loudly, for, when the guests were still fuss ing with their dinners, and the "soup coloraturas," as G. Nathan calls t!;em, were active, it was not easy Jo distinguish her small voice from the rattle of china and silver; but prettily. ' For the rest, Mr. .Ziegfeld's enter tainment, following an equally elab orate but more conventional'0 o'clock revue," as gorgeous as to raiment and scenic backgrounds, and Promised Joys at Omaha Theaters RAYMOND HITCHCOCK will appear at Brandels toniBht, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, with a mntinee-'Wednes-day, in "Hltihy Koo. 1919." said to ba the best of the Hltchy Koo scries. The show Is a siiccecslon of unrelated scenes and numbers, in which Hitchcock moves in and out, rov as Capt. John Smith In historical burkHMue, now as a "barber In a hiiarloufl rough-house scene, now as the mayor of. a rural community, and so on through a lauKhinc and musical romp trout the rise of the curtain to the end. There are 100 entertainers besides Hltchey" in the show. Including the fnmous beauty chorus of "40 under 20." Prominent In the cast are the famous Duncan Sisters. Rita Dane, Ruth Mitchell, rrincess White Deer, Elaine Palmer, Florence O'Denlshawn, Mildred Keats, .lewephloe MacNIcoll, Savoy and Brennan, George Moore, William- Holbrook, Mark Sullivan, Morris Black, Ursula O'Hara, Henry T.lnxtn, Chief Os-Ko-Mon, Chief Eagle HorsCK Moontieht and many others. rT1HE BIRD OF PARADISE" is firm I ly established In the list of peren- 'nlal plays, partially due to the sweetness of the story. Ita unusual atmo sphere and the fact that Oliver MoreVco has selected the best csst aeh season he could securs to play the various roles. These are the prime reasons why "The Bird of Paradise," which comes to the Brandet thli week. Is in its eighth season of unabetcd pouularlty and prosperity. This year Ann Reeder enacts the role of the unhappy Hawaiian princess. AT THE Orpheum this week the bill Is headed by the distinguished character actor, Alexander Carr, who Is to appear In the dramatic come dy, "An April Shower," a play which h wrote in collaboration with Edgar Allan Woolf. The heart interest as well as the fun In this little play greatly appeals to vaudeville audiences. Edith Clifford is tn contribute one of the featured acts. Her vivacity counts for much In the ef fectiveness of her performance, but it Is her vocal endowment which especially endears her to music lovers. A musical fantasy, "The Rainbow Cocktail," is to be another of the featured offering. Originally it was produced by Hassard Short at one of the Laitibn Club Gambols, where It created a sensation, The princi pals are Bruce De Iette anT Helen Coyne. A strenuous acrobatic dance is offered by the three Hlckey brothers. Sam Hearn portrays a rube with a fiddle,- Rudinoff, the originator of smoke painting, is an unusual entertainer. Japan's noted hand equilibrists, lshtliawa Brothers, do an astonishing variety of trick. Clever say Inss" from the newspapers are featured in "Topics of the Day," and news events in Klnograms. THREE headline acts are registered on the bill at the Orpheum for th week ' of April 4. Ch.-irley Grapewln supported by Anna Chance present the comedy, "Jed's Vacation," Bert Fits-gibbons,- the original Daffy Dill Is to contribute another of the headline offer ings. Ten people are included In the company to present the musical comedy, "Last Night," the music and lvrlcs of wnicn were composed by Blanche Frank lyn and Nt Vincent. Mile. Rhea is to be the special feature. She is offering an original production of story-dances, songs IIIUSIC, t Princess White Deer FAR to the north, in New York state, on the very line between the United States and Canada, is the town 'of St. Regis,' th reser vation of the Mohawk Indians, h was here that White Deer, the sen sational dancing girl in the Ray mond Hitchcock company, was born. Daughter of Little. Deer, whose father' be fore him was Run ning Deer, this Indian maid claims the best blood of all the northern and eastern Indian tribes for her grandfather was the last of tht blooded, the hereditary chiefs of the Mohawks. Educated on - the reser vation of her people. White Deer later went to school in Buffalo -and later, in company with her mother and father, she toured in Europe for 1(1 years. Here her success was phenomenal, kings and queens, gov ernors and rulers entertained her in royal style, and many of them heaped priceless presents upon her; ADVERTISEMENT I A Woman's Verdict! Telia of Suffering Greatly With Kidney and Bladder Trouble and How Balmwort ' Brought Relief. TACOHS aid Jermon's attraction. "The J Golden Crook," will be the offering at Billy Arlington, the unctious- comedian, is at the head of the funmakers and is surrounded by a company numbering among its members Ed Johnston, Juliette Belmont, Louise Barlow, Ann Meyers and the Pall Mall trio, composed of Edward nonnessey, waiter Iaoy ana carl Tay lor, together with a chorus of regular stunner who are becomingly attired In gorireous raiments Ladles' matinee at 3:16 dally all week, starting tomorrow. To day's matinee begins at 3 o'clock. Ti OBERT EVEREST'S "Monkey Hippo ri drome", comes to the Empress as the stellar attraction of the new show opening today. Everest troupe of 20 simian actors furnish a complete vaude ville program of specialties and aerial features, aided and abetted by their own orchestra. A featured act of the bill will be that of Al Conrad and Vectorial Good win, musical artists. In which the piano, violin and piano accordion are featured. Alice Tojettl and Wallace Bennett show singing and dancing of a grade seldom encountered in vaudeville.' Page and Cray specialize In comedy and character songs. DONT BE SICK No matter what your ailment in ay be, whether LmgK Heart, Liver, Stomach, Kidney or any other troubles, if , other : methods have failed in your case v COME TO ME Dr. Frank F. Burhora , Many cases of Headache, Backache, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis and Neuralgia have disappeared after a few spinal adjustments. A spinal analysis of your spine will tell you what is causing your sickness. Office adjustments are 12 for $10 or 30 for $25. Outside calls promptly an . swered. Send for FREE booklet. Office Hours 9 A. M. to 9 P. M. Sunday Hour 10 A. M. to 12 Dr. Frank F. Burhorn Graduate Palmer School of Chiropractic Suite 414-420 Securities Bid.. Cor. 16th and F arnam Sta. Phone Douglas 8347 Lady Attendant A Her Letter Well Worth Reading Mrs. Nellie McGinn, 609 East 138th street, New York City, writes: "For the last year I had suffered greatly from Kidney and Bladder trouble, "distressing pain in the back and hips, with rheumatic twinges and frequent severe headache, ac companied by nervousness, chills and fever; also a frequent desire to eliminate, a smarting, burning sen sation, with pain in the region of the bladder. I would frequently have to arise at night, my sleep be ing disturbed by the pressure and inflammation in bladder. ' Beginning the use of Balmwort Tablets, I no ticed almost instant relief, and, con tinuing to use them. I am now to tally well and relieved of all pain and distress from which I suffered. I am glad to recommend Balmwort Tablets as a reliable, beneficial medicine and trust others may find relief and freedom from pain and distress as I did, etc." ' The above letter is a true state ment and is on file in our offices. Balmwort Tablets bring relief when other medicine has failed. Sold by leading druggists, $1.00 per tube. Adv. . . i Hotel Rome $1.25 Table d'Hote Dinner 6 to 8 P. M. Every Evening t Also a La Carte z Modest Prices Our Cafeteria is Very Popular Try It. - " If you are contemplating giving a banquet, large or small, we're at your service. Make reserva tions early. . ROME MILLER Hitchcock Loves an Artistic Dance Wherever He Sees It DO not know of anything I more bes-.ititul in art than an artistic dance," said Raymond Hitchcock recently. "There is some thing about the airy grace and sub tle movement that touches the heart and awakens interest, if not sym pathy. It betokens health and spirits, which put color and snap into the face and eye and attract the ob server. I should say, and it may sound odd, that the first and almost indispensable essential of a dancer is good health. A woman in good health has an advantage everywhere. It means a greater ease, a K'cater strength, a livelier expression ami a more artistic grace. She is pretty sure to fill the eye as an object to look upon, which is a splendid be ginning, and if she superadds a nat ural tact, grace and industry, you may depend upon it she will stand forth in a way to captivate. To ac complish this with the girls we have had with us for the last two yeais, I have given them a course of exer cise which I call a 'lung-bath.' The girls are formed in pairs and asked to face ahead, raise their chins, bring out their chests, keep a loose knee and toe the stager They are tola to forget that they have any shoul ders, for to think of them is-to get the 'militaire back,' than which there is nothing harder or more ungraceful- "For the first series everything goes by count. The respiration is counted, so are the steps;, and body, but, after all, as the princess wise ly said: "With all the glory in Europe, I walited to get back to my native land to be just an Amer ican girl." limbs and breath move, sway, come and go to the symmetrical 'one, two, one-two.' Once or ' twice a week I have them take a long walk under the guidance of our stage manager. Take days like we have beon enjoying recently, with the air, clear, clean, crisp and cold, and a free walk of this sort will bring the girls home pictures of good health, good color and graceful bearing. To manage men seems to be harder for purposes of dancing, if graceful effect is the highest air. They are not so tractable, nor are they so graceful naturally. They can do difficult things in the danc ing art, but feats of this sort are not very magnetic. I sometimes feel that a male dancer must be born, not made, as they say of poets. He must have a thorough command of himself, both mentally and physically, and a concentration of mind upon his work that would make a mathematician proud. When he gets to a place where he can lose sight of himself, if he has a natural gift of dancing which means sentiment, . grace, music and industry, and a moderately good presence he is bound to take the eye and lieart of the observer and become a worthy fayorite. How to tell a person to become a good dancer is pretty much like telling a person how to become a good pro fessor of any art. The best one can So is generalize, or to relae a bit of one's own experience, which is not always helpful to the student. He must in the greatest measure work the problem out for himself. If he finds dancing easy, tasteful and effective, and he takes himself and work seriously, the result is reasonably apt to be satisfactory." Sort of Hands-Across-the Sea Situation in Filming Jack London's "Burning Daylight" THAT the movies are drawing all parts of the wide world together was never better-illustrated than by the current production of Jack London's story of "Burning Day light," by the Shurtleff company. This story of Alaska and New York, typical in every sense of the varied life of the American continent, and written by one of the most typical of American authors, is being filmed under the direction of an English manor rather a native of England, for Edward Slonian, the director, passed a number of his earlier years in that country. But the admirers of London's works need not fear for Sicilian's grasp of his subject or ability to understand its atmosphere. "Even when I was a lad in knee breeches on the other side," said Sloman, "I was unconsciously preparing for this work. One of the popular boy periodicals which I devoured weekly was the Ha-penny Marvel. In this magazine, which corresponded to the blood and thunder weeklies) printed on this- side to thrill Amer ican boys, I got to know Indian, frontiersmen, goldseekers, trapper, scouts and all the other heroic per sonnel of the western drama. I wan steeped in the customs and lore of the wild west and no Yankee lad could have outdone me in knowledge of the history of American frontier life so far as the fiction stories truthfully depicted them." Mitchell Lewis is playing the titta part in "Burning -Daylight," and in a notable cast are Helen Ferguson, Arthur Carewe, Alfred Allen, W. V. Mong, Gertrude Astor and others. Mr. Sloman is to alternate his la bors between the Jack London stories purchased by the Shurtlilf company and the Peter B. Kyne novels, which that author will per sonally supervise. Tonight's the Night Fun Runs Wild and Youth and "' Music Dance With Pure Delight A National Necessity Tonight Until Wednesday- Matinee Wednesday RAYMOND MDTCIH1COCK In His -Latest, Prettiest and Happiest Musical Revue -Third of the Laughing Series and First Time in Omaha " HITCH Y 00 1919" Book by Geo. V Hobart, Lyric and Mutia by Cole Porter, 100 Entertainers - 101 Per Cent Show " One and Only " HITCHY" and Chorus of 40 Under 20 N. B. An eye opener in green fields of gayety, filling your vein with the wine of laughter, and taking the creak out of the hinge of tomorrow' work. . j SEAT SALE A GALE DONT WAIT npiAFO Evenings $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 and $3.00 rniVCO Wed Mat 50c $1 00 $i.5o, $2.00 and $2.50 Three Bays Starting Thursday, April 1st Evening, At 7 and 9 Saturday' Matinees, at 1 and 3 P. M. A WONDER PICTURE OF TIMELY AND DRAMATIC INTEREST "LIFTING SHADOWS" ' . With EMMY WHELEN From the Story by Henri Ardel Four Days Starting A I At-U L WEEK STARTING SUNDAY, MARCH 28 MATINEE DAILY 215 EVERY NIGHT SilS ALEXANDER CARR and Company !n "AN APRIL SHOWER" A Human Story by Edgar A. Wool! and Altxandar Carr HICKEY BROTHERS SAM HEARN in The Rub with Hi Fiddle Varieties of Vaudevill and Bow EDITH CLIFFORD Comedienne ' rirasinc to the Eye and Ear Roy Ingraham at the Piano RUDINOFF ISHIKAWA BROS. The Originator of Smoke . , , Painting and the Whistling JP" Noted Hand Act, "The Courtship of a Equilibrist Nightingale" "THE RAINBOW COCKTAIL" A M!sal Fantasy With Bruce De Lette and Helen Coyne A Lawrence Schwab Production TOPICS OF THE DAY KINOGRAM3 X X I V Nights, 15c to $1.00; Sundays and Holiday a few at $1.25; Matinees, 15c to 75c. (Patron Pay War Tax.) "OMAHA'S FUN CENTER" tthmatCT2 Daily Mat. 15-25-SOe SfTgy Evngs.. 25-50-75C. $1 Tnat Glorious. Glittering. Solntlllttlsi Sseetacls TL OAI REN AD AAV Musical i isc uwi.ybif vnvvn With That Funny Little Ho-Bo, Pall Hall Trio: Ballet el Allied Nations 22 Beauty Chorui of Lovely Crookettea 22 LADIES' DIME MATINEE WEEK DAYS Burlesque Billy Arlington A. HOSPE CO. PIANOS ttjKed aitd repaired in Work GnaranteH U18 DonglM St. Trl Pom. 18&. D HARP E SCHOOL L Harps - Qj Furnished Y, Pupii II 308 Lyric Bide. Phone Doug. 8704 NEW SHOW TODAY a. EVERETT'S MONKS Monkey Hippodrome With 0 Simian Artists PAGE & CRAY Bita of Versatility AL CONRAD St COMPANY Instrumental Musical Offerin g TOJETTI BENNETT A Whirl of Dan cing With Songs Photoplay Attraction. Wm. Fox Present , GLADYS BROCKWELL in "The Devil' Riddle" Hank Mann Comedy Screen Star at Home and Around the Studio Path Weekly Bee Want Ads Frorjuce Results. Next Sunday Evening OLIVER MOROSCO iJTTTl i PRC5EHT5 THE EVER POPULAR HAWAIIAN ROMANCE I 1H Htg ja k M J n m . a V 1 RICilAR WALTON I TUUY AUTJtMOF "viiai ej a uri tl:ii!i!iaiiaiiyiiaiiiaHi)aina!iiyiiiiy!ma WITH n HAWAIIAN M PLAYERS -AND M Tift thrilling VOLCANO 5CEMC Seats On Sale Nights, 50c to $2.00 Mat. 50c to $1.50 Tke Most Valuable Jewel m Milaclys Casket Is Beauty. By Madame Maree. SO skilled have the- modern day makers of toilot ' Roods be come, that It is no loncrer nec essary for you to have been born beautiful for you can so easily cultivate all the necessary re )uirements. Just a little patience, coupled with a proper knowledge of the rlgrht preparations to use. will bring to almost any woman a clear fcktn. beautiful hair. rounded figure or whatever she Is most In need of to complete her attractiveness. A few suggestions may serve as examples. Now a io Hair. Let us suppose your hair has started to come out. Kvery morn ing; your comb is full of hairs that have pulled Out or broken off from brittleness. Or suppose the hair seems dead and lifeless and is not growing as it should. All this can be so surely and quickly remedied. Just ro to your druggist and sret whatever materials you may need to mix at homo the following: - To a half pint each of bay-rum and water or to a full pint of wltchhazel If you prefer add one ounce of beta-qulnol. Mix thor oughly and apply to the scalp freely and often. This mixture is not only eco nomical but none Is better at any price. For Shampoo Bv all means, sret a package of epKol from your drugKlst. It ell for a quarter and there are week of delight In a package. Soap alone will not remove the oily crust down next to the scalp. Here la a Surprising; Method for Removing; Illackhead. Tou just dleaolre them away. No pinching the skin nor queei lng. Neroxln Is the name of a pow der to be sprinkled on a sponge or wash cloth. It comes in pack ages retailing for about fifty rents and the package will tell you just how to use It. Don't tolerate blackhead and pimples when you can get neroxln and it is so simple to ue it. For Wrinkles and Ltaea of Ace. Here is an almost never failing; remedy that acts so quickly that it will astonish you. The following method will re move Mhe most deep-set wrinkles in a very short time and produce a tremendous difference In your appearance as to age. It makes the skin delightfully plump and youthful. Immediately begins to build up the tissue and finally leaves the skin almost as firm and smooth as in early youth. Simply mix two table spoonfuls of glycerine In a ttalf pint of water and add two ounces of eptol. Use liberally every day. Soon crow's feet, deep lines, big and little wrinkles, and flabblness of flesh will disappear. The re sult in your appearance will be startling. This rarely fails. It Is exceedingly economical and Is no trouble at all. You can obtain the eptol from the drug store for fifty cents, and the glycerine is inexpensive. Never t'se a Rama Irritant to Remove Hair. Unsightly growths of superflu ous hair under the arms, on the forearms and elsewhere, should be wiped off with a little sulfo solution. This will be found far better than burning the hair and skin with some harsh and cheap depilatory. Sulfo solution comes In dollar bottles only, but you will find It worth many times ita price In the satisfaction you will derive from using It. Aa for Red Srt, Freckle and a Muddy Skla. this can easily be remedied in a few days by another home made and simple formula. Just mlx" two tablespoonfuls of glycerine and one ounce of zintone in a pint of water. Tliis results in a satiny cream, and makes over a pint, which is several times mora than you obtain in the stores for anything lik the same cost, and besides you have a beautlfler which has no equal for quick and positive results. It will remove every blemish, red spot and freckle, and all muddiness. and the result Is a perfect tint, purtty and clearness of skin which Is exquisite. The tlntone can be se cured at any drug tor for fifty cent and you probakly have tb glycerin at home. If you do not wish to use any of thes suggestion today, up pos you clip this out and sav It lor future reference.